Technical Program Manager Iii, Data Center Npi, Cloud Infrastructure

Google Google · Big Tech · Sunnyvale, CA +3

Technical Program Manager III role focused on leading the operational aspects of new hardware and infrastructure product introductions into Google's data centers. This involves managing the product lifecycle, defining requirements for deployment and serviceability, assessing risks, and leading cross-functional teams. The role requires experience in program management, data center hardware, and system-level NPI.

What you'd actually do

  1. Lead the operational aspects of new product introduction programs through all product life-cycle phases.
  2. Define and drive requirements for serviceability, deployability, and maintainability of new products in the data center environment while acting as the primary liaison between engineering design teams and data center operations teams.
  3. Understand product designs, assess risks, and contribute to technical problem-solving including resolving hardware/software issues during new product introduction phases.
  4. Build and lead cross-functional program teams, ensuring alignment on goals and responsibilities.
  5. Identify potential risks to program success (e.g., technical, schedule, operational), as well as drive root cause analysis and corrective actions for issues arising during new product introduction.

Skills

Required

  • Bachelor's degree in a technical field, or equivalent practical experience.
  • 5 years of experience in program management.
  • Experience with product life-cycle in the data center hardware space.
  • Experience supporting data centers and system-level new product introductions (NPI).

Nice to have

  • 5 years of experience managing cross-functional or cross-team projects.
  • Experience in data center operations, infrastructure management, or a similar technical domain.
  • Experience with hybrid cloud architectures and public cloud providers.
  • Knowledge of data center infrastructure components (e.g., servers, machine learning, storage, power, cooling) and their interdependencies in the context of new technology integration.